W.A.S.H. - 2010

Thursday, April 1, 2010

In this project, we had to connect to opposing traits that define us in a sculpture, and I decided to go with maliciousness and sweetness, both of which are obviously reflected in the bear and the kitchen knives stabbing it. It took me five idea sketches to get to this since I was having artist's block with this assignment, and as soon as I had it reviewed and all the details down, I took the lightest-color bear in my closet and ripped it in half with an exacto knife. Keeping the cream color of the bear in mind, I purchased a quilt with a similar, soft color palette, but also trying to work with the deep red color of blood and maintaining the sense of child-like innocence and joy. After having that picked out, I created a structure to present the bear on the quilt, and made it out of card board and broken pencils to hold it at the 90 degree angle I needed it to be- yes, I'm cheap. I then draped the quilt on it to achieve some folds, hot-glued in place, laid the bear off-center, and then drenched it in my home-made blood, (ketchup, highly concentrated red water color, and water), all over the area I stabbed the bear to give it the effect of wounds, as well as flinging the blood all over the quilt to give it the effect of the stabbing action. As a finishing touch, I hot-glued old kitchen knives into the biggest wound-areas of the bear and adjusted them into varying angles to give it more of that 'malicious' effect.

Overall, the critique was well-receptive, and most agreed that my choices to use lighting and old, broken kitchen knives were good. However, they said they would've like to see more of those old kitchen knives included, as the newer-looking ones weren't as nice, and a different way to try this same idea is to use more or less knives, and to try to add more blood stain on the knives going into the bear.

The textures selected for my accordion book reflect some ideas I had to implement my choice from our Gestalt final, and each two panels are designed to be very different from one another as you flip through it, mainly differing on uses of newspaper, paper bag material, or plain white paper and handwritten vs. typed. I made the accordion book by purchasing matte board and cutting it into 8x8" squares, and taping it together with black duck tape. I applied the different textures with spray glue.

For my Modular Madness project, I used receipts that I've collected myself in the past year, and those that have been collected and donated from others. I took a suggestion and decided to make a wallet with a strap and pockets. I would've added decals such as credit cards, but I was phased by time as an issue and wasn't able to do so. My process began with a question on how to make the wallet, and decided to make a base of two cardboard pieces to hold the receipts better, since they are fairly delicate. I glued the receipt cover in a random order, starting with spray glue, (which left an odd texture), and then moved on to glue stick, and then combined a the two pieces with a layer of receipts to allow it the opening-closing function of a wallet. For the strap, I made a base with duck tape and shaped it accordingly, then tapered it in a similar fashion to the wallet base except with the color-sides showing to give it some 'style.' In order to allow the strap to contain the wallet, as well as be able to open and close, I applied Velcro, (which posed some problems do to the delicate nature of the receipts, and therefore had to make another layer). And finally, for the inside of the wallet, I made pockets with a base of tape and construction paper, and cut it accordingly to give the pockets the definition they needed to allow space inside them.

During the critique, I allowed my classmates the ability to interact with it, and asked for any chunk change to be disposed of into the wallet. I didn't make any money or any sympathy for, technically, having the most expensive project of the class, but they did like the fact that they could interact with my project. They say, however, that otherwise it would've been boring.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

This was surprisingly fun to make. I only wish there was more time to do more detailed work, like make the dots move more naturally, but I felt the choppy-ness worked out really well- especially with the song.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Saturday, February 6, 2010

The person that did the critique of mine said she liked that I combined handwritten text and newsprint, as well as how I created my dots out of crumbled paper, as she felt it added to the composition. I agreed with her, as it was my intention, and also about how I picked the best texture, although I was torn a bit with another that was all newsprint for awhile.

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I did Jamie's piece, and I really liked her choice of texture, because it worked well with her dots' placement. My only recommendation was to try integrating the 3-D texture into the dots, because I felt you lost the dots a bit being 2-D, and adding the texture of the newsprint into the dots would've helped to bring them out more as well as add more balance to the piece. Also: she had eight dots. :P